Sometimes I think it’s as if the terrorists and the feds and the cops and the media and the Arabs and the rest are all acting like they’re supposed to act in some bad science fiction movie.
Do you think that Hollywood is to blame for all of this? I think it’s an interesting conceptual / cultural dilemma — have we exported the possibility of Die Hard-type violence to violent-prone cultures?
I see that MIB II is coming out soon. Who planned that? And will the new Office of Homeland Security have uniforms that look like that worn by the Fresh Prince?
Even as I become more
Even as I become more obsessed with the potential of Blogger, I’m realizing its limiations. I’m seeking a way to re-publish my months of archives on a new blog and it’s not working all that well. I think the folks at Moveable Type have it going on but it’s just slightly beyond my technical reach at the moment.
I’m fascinated with the way that the media has been handling blogs lately. The New York Times, et. al., are really looking hard for stories about the Web’s usefulness when it’s all around us. Look at any magazine – where did the author get his facts, and how did the author do her primary research? How did a technology developer get an initial idea going? How do you think terrorists of the near future and past present are communicating? Blogs, while wonderful, are only part of the Web’s beauty.
I am in the process
I am in the process of redesigning everything that I own that is online. (I’m glad that I’m only attempting online properties.)
So, soon enough, there will be a new Deckchairs on the Titanic, hosted at a to-be-disclosed domain name that is not MANOVERBOARD.com.
MANOVERBOARD.com, anyway, will go corporate and MANOVERBOARD.net will become the art project space that .com has been for four years. I hope this doesn’t make too many folks angry but I promise I’ll do the best I can to migrate the information and ideas to their new homes. Thanks for your patience – it may take two or three more weeks.
My grandmother died this weekend
My grandmother died this weekend at the age of 92.
She was an amazing woman who raised my mother single-handedly and worked (in an electronics factory) pretty much all her life.
I am simply stunned at the fact that she is no longer on this planet with me.
I saw her about a week ago and videotaped her for a few minutes. I probably will never watch that tape. Well, maybe in a year, when the headstone is unveiled.
Beliefnet.com
Daniel Pearl Foundation – The
Daniel Pearl Foundation – The Birth of Adam Pearl
An incredible moment in history has been arranged. G-d bless Adam and his mum.
Bad Thoughts What makes us
Bad Thoughts
What makes us think that we’re all immune from the ravages of history. When 100 million people died between 1901 and 2000, I wonder how we position ourselves historically. The past fifty years have not only been times of incredible economic growth but of the growth of peace in the West. Now that we’re all talking about nuclear terror (see 5/28/2002 post), it makes one think that we could be entering the full stage of history once again. India and Pakistan, I hope, will prove us all wrong.
I heard an interesting post on NPR the other day — with the fall of national governments over the past twenty years or so has also come a precipitous rise in two organizational constructs — multinational companies and terrorist organizations. In both cases, they are often state-sponsored and in both cases they work according to internal machinery that impacts external communities and the lives of many individuals. In fact, I’m sure that terrorists like those in Al Quaeda have studied the organizational structure of companies whose reach, in both communications and markets, is global.
It’s also likely that, because of our return to history’s fold(s), we are all moving past the lines of “individualism” that has marked our lives and our behavior for the past 20 years. In other words, we have joined a cause whether we wished or not.
These thougths were had over a discussion with my friend M, who was here for dinner tonight with my wife and daughter. We also spoke about the likelihood of the next terrorist attack here in NYC (and/or WDC) and about the great unwritten story — how many people are leaving NYC (and/or WDC) out of fear, panic, or plain old anxiety. Surely the New York Times, full of Real Estate advertisements and classified advertising, won’t be covering this story. And who would have the data — probably Bloomberg (the mayor and the machinery) and likely a lot of other companies — Visa, Banks, and Realtors.
Insomnia
That time again I haven't
That time again
I haven’t posted interesting links in a while, perhaps because I’ve been busy trying to make my own links interesting. But here are a few that are must-seebies. (Shoot, I just posted something to this without publishing and now it’s gone when I hit the Forward button.) BTW, I’m still horrified by the recent article about nuclear terror in the Sunday New York Times. Note that this link may expire in two weeks time.
Glurge: a collection of spiritual and otherwise odd emails sent around the planet
A discorama of NYC bloggers
What is this? Did Brad feel like he has to support the Taliban because they are the underdogs?
On the New York City
On the New York City Company of Friends list, Lisa Hendrickson, a client and colleague of mine, posted this. It was in reference t someone trying to figure out their personal conflict of interest. I liked it:
Friends,
Here’s my opinion on the subject:
So many people wait for the “right” time to do something or the “right”
circumstances or whatever it is that has it be “right.” I think it
isn’t a question of what’s “right” rather it is in making the commitment
to live your dream. Making the commitment, a real commitment means that
you’re willing to go through whatever it is that you will go through to
live your dreams. To live a life that is rich and rewarding by living
through your dreams takes courage. It takes bravery. It takes
singlemindedness and a self-confidence that you can do whatever it is
that you put your mind, heart and soul into. Often times, people around
you don’t understand what you’re doing or why, and in the face of
people’s lack of understanding you must have the strength and courage to do what calls you. I believe doing your dream isn’t a question of
timing but one of commitment. When are you going to start living the
life you’ve dreamed of?